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Colonel Sibthorp

Charles Sibthorp
Charles Delaet Waldo Sibthorp.jpg
Portrait of Sibthorp by John Andrews.
Member of Parliament for Lincoln
In office
1835–1856
Member of Parliament for Lincoln
In office
1826–1832
Personal details
Born 14 February 1783
Lincoln, Great Britain
Died 14 December 1855 (aged 73)
London, United Kingdom
Political party Tory/Ultra-Tory
Military service
Allegiance  United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Years of service 1803–1822
Rank Lieutenant-Colonel
Unit 4th Dragoon Guards
Scots Greys

Charles de Laet Waldo Sibthorp (14 February 1783 – 14 December 1855), popularly known as Colonel Sibthorp, was a widely caricatured British Ultra-Tory politician in the early 19th century. He sat as a Member of Parliament for Lincoln from 1826 to 1855 (with one brief break).

Sibthorp was born into a Lincoln gentry family, and was commissioned into the Scots Greys in 1803. He was promoted Lieutenant in 1806 and later transferred to the 4th Dragoon Guards, in which he reached the rank of Captain. He did not serve abroad and continued in the service until 1822, when he succeeded to the family estates and also succeeded his brother as Lieutenant-Colonel of the Royal South Lincolnshire Militia. He married Maria Tottenham in 1812; they had four children.

During Sibthorp's three decades in Parliament, he became renowned, along with Sir Robert Inglis, as one of its most reactionary members. He stoutly opposed Catholic Emancipation, Emancipation of the Jews in England, the Reform Act of 1832, the repeal of the Corn Laws, and the 1851 Great Exhibition. He was convinced that any changes from the Britain of his youth (in the late 18th century) were signs of degeneracy, that Britain was about to go bankrupt, and that the new railways were a passing fad which would soon give way to a return to stagecoaches.


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